Rüti’s landscape has undergone major transformations — from medieval deforestation to a shift from agriculture to cattle breeding — which have shaped its architecture and spatial organization. The decline of local industry led to job losses and a weakening of Rüti’s identity, as many residents moved to cities. This shift, combined with waves of migration, reshaped the village and eroded its communal infrastructure.
In this context, the project proposes a new system of regenerative agriculture, formulated as a utopia, with the aim of making the soil cultivable again and stimulating a new local economy. Conceived as a way to restore vital interdependencies within village life, a new chain of food processing, storage, and distribution is implemented across the village.
Along the newly drawn harvest route, two buildings emerged as key: the Gasthaus zum Adler and the Mehrzweckhalle. Their overlapping histories reflect the village’s evolution — the Adler expanded with the population and served as a cultural center until it was replaced in the 1990s by the more modern Mehrzweckhalle, which was later abandoned following the village's industrial decline.
The proposal reactivates both buildings as central stages in the new system, imagined as a theatrical piece animated by the movement of people, animals, and goods.
At the Mehrzweckhalle, unused areas are repurposed as a processing center for apples and milk — delivered at the upper level and processed on the ground floor. Interventions include a new staircase and added openings to bring more light into the spaces and to make the transformation process visible from the path.
The Adler, on the other hand, accommodates storage, food distribution, and shared meals. A new granary with a portico allows for sheltered unloading, and a series of additions follow the building’s logic of aggregated spaces: a banquet hall with a stage and bar, curtains with integrated lighting, a core for the lift and toilets, refrigerated rooms, and a shop where residents collect their share. This final, generous space opens onto two floors, creating a direct link with the village street.